A growing wave of sex-positive feminists are working to usher in what they describe as a “pleasure revolution” in which women’s sexuality is embraced, rather than stigmatized, by both individuals and society at large. According to advocates of the movement, such as author and feminist Stephanie Theobold, the pleasure revolution is “about women asserting their own pleasure,” just as the #MeToo movement was about the problem of “men imposing their pleasure on women.” But for Reba Maybury, a 27-year-old political science professor and professional dominatrix, the larger problem is a historical power imbalance that she’s now working to correct in a unique fashion.

A socialist of mixed-race background, Maybury, who also goes by the name Mistress Rebecca, says that she had “always been fascinated by sex and notions of shame around sexuality,” particularly in regard to fetishes.
“I find it ridiculous how secretive people are about fetishes, because everybody has them. Some are just more extreme than others. For most people fetishes are quite subtle and sensitive,” she explains.

For many of her clientele, who are almost exclusively white right-wing men because she finds herself unable “to be even fictionally cruel to any other type of man,” that fetish is serving a powerful woman. Maybury derives her pleasure comes from forcing those men to see the contradiction between their love of powerful women and their support for political parties that actively work to limit women’s rights and empowerment. In her book, Dining with Humpty Dumpty, she detailed conversations with a man she said exhibited the “disgusting contradiction” of claiming to be both “a ‘female supremacist’ and a Tory.’”

“A lot of the book is about how people use political issues as a sexual fantasy and how that’s problematic,” Marbury explained in an interview with [Link View Has Been Removed. Click Here To Unlock This Content.]. “In the book, I decide to think about the power dynamic that exists between a dominatrix and her submissive. If he wants to really make me happy, which he says he does, what could possibly make me more happy than turning him into a socialist?”

Watch Centre Pompadour’s three-part interview with Maybury below.
Read the full story at [Link View Has Been Removed. Click Here To Unlock This Content.].

A growing wave of sex-positive feminists are working to usher in what they describe as a “pleasure revolution” in which women’s sexuality is embraced, rather than stigmatized, by both individuals and society at large. According to advocates of the movement, such as author and feminist Stephanie Theobold, the pleasure revolution is “about women asserting their own pleasure,” just as the #MeToo movement was about the problem of “men imposing their pleasure on women.” But for Reba Maybury, a 27-year-old political science professor and professional dominatrix, the larger problem is a historical power imbalance that she’s now working to correct in a unique fashion.

A socialist of mixed-race background, Maybury, who also goes by the name Mistress Rebecca, says that she had “always been fascinated by sex and notions of shame around sexuality,” particularly in regard to fetishes.
“I find it ridiculous how secretive people are about fetishes, because everybody has them. Some are just more extreme than others. For most people fetishes are quite subtle and sensitive,” she explains.

For many of her clientele, who are almost exclusively white right-wing men because she finds herself unable “to be even fictionally cruel to any other type of man,” that fetish is serving a powerful woman. Maybury derives her pleasure comes from forcing those men to see the contradiction between their love of powerful women and their support for political parties that actively work to limit women’s rights and empowerment. In her book, Dining with Humpty Dumpty, she detailed conversations with a man she said exhibited the “disgusting contradiction” of claiming to be both “a ‘female supremacist’ and a Tory.’”

“A lot of the book is about how people use political issues as a sexual fantasy and how that’s problematic,” Marbury explained in an interview with [Link View Has Been Removed. Click Here To Unlock This Content.]. “In the book, I decide to think about the power dynamic that exists between a dominatrix and her submissive. If he wants to really make me happy, which he says he does, what could possibly make me more happy than turning him into a socialist?”

Watch Centre Pompadour’s three-part interview with Maybury below.
Read the full story at [Link View Has Been Removed. Click Here To Unlock This Content.].

You could walk into any walmart in the country and have a chick like that on her knees for a pack of cigarettes.

I'm sure she's converting people to socialism though.

The part about a "contradiction" between being right-wing and loving powerful women is also a non-starter. There are lots of female leaders on the right. They just aren't shamelessly paraded around as "first female ____". They're sent death threats like every other right-wing leader and their gender is ignored.

The problem is that right and left have dramatically different concepts of empowerment.

The left considers sexual promiscuity and prolonged adolescence to be empowerment (which the right considers pathetic).

The right views traditional matriarchal figures as empowered (which the left views as an oppressive, stifling).

It actually has nothing to do with gender. The exact same paradigm applies to males.

The right wing idealizes patriarchal males. The left sees being a patriarchal figure as a prison sentence.

The left romanticizes the subversive, promiscuous male — all of these "pimp" and "cuck" lifestyles. It's hardly different from the left's romance with the "slut" female. They all accept extreme degradation as long as it means avoiding patriarchal/matriarchal burdens.